Catastrophic Health Insurance Florida 2026 — Who Qualifies & What It Costs

The ACA's most affordable plan tier explained — eligibility rules, what's actually covered, and whether it beats Bronze for young Floridians.

📅 Updated January 2026 ⏱ 7 min read ✓ Licensed FL Agents Available

Catastrophic health insurance plans are the ACA's lowest-tier coverage option — and they're among the most misunderstood. Unlike short-term plans (which aren't ACA-compliant), catastrophic plans are full ACA marketplace plans that include all essential health benefits. They just have very high deductibles in exchange for the lowest possible premiums.

Here's everything Florida residents need to know about catastrophic plans for 2026.

What Is a Catastrophic Health Plan?

A catastrophic health plan is an ACA-compliant health insurance plan specifically designed for young adults and people facing hardships. Key features:

That last point is critical. Unlike Bronze, Silver, and Gold plans, you cannot use ACA subsidies to reduce the cost of a catastrophic plan. This makes them less attractive for most subsidy-eligible Floridians.

Who Qualifies for Catastrophic Plans in Florida?

Catastrophic plans are only available to two groups:

1. Adults Under Age 30

If you're under 30 years old on the day coverage begins, you qualify for a catastrophic plan regardless of income. This is the most common qualification — these plans are sometimes called "young adult plans" because of this.

2. People With a Hardship or Affordability Exemption

Adults of any age can qualify if they've been granted a hardship exemption or if they qualify based on the affordability test. Qualifying hardships include:

Florida Note: Because Florida has not expanded Medicaid, some adults who would qualify for Medicaid in other states fall into a "coverage gap." These individuals may qualify for a hardship exemption and thus a catastrophic plan.

Catastrophic Plan Costs in Florida — 2026

Catastrophic plan premiums vary by age and county. Here are typical ranges for Florida in 2026:

AgeMonthly Premium (Before Subsidies)Annual Deductible
21–25$85 – $130/month$9,450
26–29$110 – $160/month$9,450
30+ (hardship only)$140 – $250/month$9,450

Note: Subsidies cannot be applied to catastrophic plans, so these are actual costs you pay.

Catastrophic vs. Bronze vs. Silver — Which Is Better for Young Floridians?

The choice between catastrophic and other plan tiers depends heavily on whether you qualify for subsidies. Here's the real comparison:

Plan TypeMonthly Premium (Age 25)Annual DeductibleSubsidies Apply?
Catastrophic~$95/mo$9,450❌ No
Bronze (unsubsidized)~$155/mo$7,500✅ Yes
Bronze (subsidized, ~$28k income)~$0–$20/mo$7,500✅ Yes
Silver (subsidized, ~$28k income)~$30–$60/mo$1,500–$3,000✅ Yes + CSR

The verdict: If you're under 30 and don't qualify for ACA subsidies, a catastrophic plan may be your cheapest option. But if you do qualify for subsidies (income roughly $15,060–$58,320 for a single person), a subsidized Bronze or Silver plan will almost certainly be a better deal.

What Does a Catastrophic Plan Actually Cover?

Despite the high deductible, catastrophic plans include full ACA coverage once the deductible is met:

This is the key difference from short-term plans: everything is covered once you hit that $9,450 deductible. You won't face a $300,000 hospital bill — it's capped.

The Right Use Case for Catastrophic Plans in Florida

Catastrophic plans make the most sense for:

How to Enroll in a Catastrophic Plan in Florida

Catastrophic plans are available through the ACA marketplace at healthcare.gov or through a licensed agent. The enrollment process is the same as any marketplace plan:

  1. Complete a marketplace application confirming your age (under 30) or hardship status
  2. Browse catastrophic plans available in your ZIP code
  3. Select your preferred carrier (options vary by county)
  4. Complete enrollment and pay your first premium

Working with a licensed agent is particularly helpful for hardship exemption cases, as agents can help document and apply the exemption correctly.

Not Sure Which Plan Is Right for You?

Our licensed Florida agents compare catastrophic, Bronze, Silver, and Gold plans and tell you which one actually costs you less given your situation. Free service — agents are paid by carriers, not you.

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Catastrophic Plans and the Young Invincible Mindset

Many young Floridians go uninsured because they feel healthy and invincible. The catastrophic plan is specifically designed to address this — offering the lowest possible premium while still providing real financial protection against worst-case scenarios.

Consider: A broken leg in Florida can cost $15,000–$35,000. A single hospitalization can run $100,000+. A catastrophic plan caps your exposure at $9,450 while keeping your monthly cost under $100. For most healthy young people, that math makes sense.

The alternative — going uninsured — is a gamble that more and more young Floridians are losing. Emergency rooms are required to treat you, but the resulting bills can follow you for years.

Bottom Line

Catastrophic plans are a legitimate, ACA-compliant option for the right person. They cover everything a full ACA plan covers — just with a very high deductible and no ability to use subsidies. If you're under 30 and don't qualify for meaningful subsidies, check catastrophic plan prices in your county. If you do qualify for subsidies, run a real comparison first — subsidized Bronze or Silver may be cheaper despite the higher listed premium.

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